269 research outputs found
Effective average action based approach to correlation functions at finite momenta
We present a truncation scheme of the effective average action approach of
the nonperturbative renormalization group which allows for an accurate
description of the critical regime as well as of correlation functions at
finite momenta. The truncation is a natural modification of the standard
derivative expansion which includes both all local correlations and two-point
and four-point irreducible correlations to all orders in the derivatives. We
discuss schemes for both the symmetric and the symmetry broken phase of the
O(N) model and present results for D=3. All approximations are done directly in
the effective average action rather than in the flow equations of irreducible
vertices. The approach is numerically relatively easy to implement and yields
good results for all N both for the critical exponents as well as for the
momentum dependence of the two-point function.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure, 3 table
Vertex corrections in gauge theories for two-dimensional condensed matter systems
We calculate the self-energy of two-dimensional fermions that are coupled to
transverse gauge fields, taking two-loop corrections into account. Given a bare
gauge field propagator that diverges for small momentum transfers q as 1 /
q^{eta}, 1 < eta < 2, the fermionic self-energy without vertex corrections
vanishes for small frequencies omega as Sigma (omega) propto omega^{gamma with
gamma = {frac{2}{1 + eta}} < 1. We show that inclusion of the leading radiative
correction to the fermion - gauge field vertex leads to
Sigma (omega) propto omega^{gamma} [ 1 - a_{eta} ln (omega_0 / omega) ],
where a_{\eta} is a positive numerical constant and omega_0 is some finite
energy scale. The negative logarithmic correction is consistent with the
scenario that higher order vertex corrections push the exponent gamma to larger
values.Comment: 6 figure
Damping of zero sound in Luttinger liquids
We calculate the damping gamma_q of collective density oscillations (zero
sound) in a one-dimensional Fermi gas with dimensionless forward scattering
interaction F and quadratic energy dispersion k^2 / 2 m at zero temperature.
For wave-vectors | q| /k_F small compared with F we find to leading order
gamma_q = v_F^{-1} m^{-2} Y (F) | q |^3, where v_F is the Fermi velocity, k_F
is the Fermi wave-vector, and Y (F) is proportional to F^3 for small F. We also
show that zero-sound damping leads to a finite maximum proportional to |k - k_F
|^{-2 + 2 eta} of the charge peak in the single-particle spectral function,
where eta is the anomalous dimension. Our prediction agrees with photoemission
data for the blue bronze K_{0.3}MoO_3.Comment: final version as published; with more technical details; we have
added a discussion of recent work which appeared after our initial cond-mat
posting; 13 pages, 5 figure
Spectral function of the Anderson impurity model at finite temperatures
Using the functional renormalization group (FRG) and the numerical
renormalization group (NRG), we calculate the spectral function of the Anderson
impurity model at zero and finite temperatures. In our FRG scheme spin
fluctuations are treated non-perturbatively via a suitable Hubbard-Stratonovich
field, but vertex corrections are neglected. A comparison with our highly
accurate NRG results shows that this FRG scheme gives a quantitatively good
description of the spectral line-shape at zero and finite temperatures both in
the weak and strong coupling regimes, although at zero temperature the FRG is
not able to reproduce the known exponential narrowing of the Kondo resonance at
strong coupling.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures; new references adde
What are spin currents in Heisenberg magnets?
We discuss the proper definition of the spin current operator in Heisenberg
magnets subject to inhomogeneous magnetic fields. We argue that only the
component of the naive "current operator" J_ij S_i x S_j in the plane spanned
by the local order parameters and is related to real transport of
magnetization. Within a mean field approximation or in the classical ground
state the spin current therefore vanishes. Thus, finite spin currents are a
direct manifestation of quantum correlations in the system.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, published versio
Dynamic response of mesoscopic metal rings and thermodynamics at constant particle number
We show by means of simple exact manipulations that the thermodynamic
persistent current in a mesoscopic metal ring threaded by a
magnetic flux at constant particle number agrees even beyond linear
response with the dynamic current that is defined via the
response to a time-dependent flux in the limit that the frequency of the flux
vanishes. However, it is impossible to express the disorder average of in terms of conventional Green's functions at flux-independent
chemical potential, because the part of the dynamic response function that
involves two retarded and two advanced Green's functions is not negligible.
Therefore the dynamics cannot be used to map a canonical average onto a more
tractable grand canonical one. We also calculate the zero frequency limit of
the dynamic current at constant chemical potential beyond linear response and
show that it is fundamentally different from any thermodynamic derivative.Comment: 19 pages, postscript (uuencoded, compressed
Renormalization of the BCS-BEC crossover by order parameter fluctuations
We use the functional renormalization group approach with partial
bosonization in the particle-particle channel to study the effect of order
parameter fluctuations on the BCS-BEC crossover of superfluid fermions in three
dimensions. Our approach is based on a new truncation of the vertex expansion
where the renormalization group flow of bosonic two-point functions is closed
by means of Dyson-Schwinger equations and the superfluid order parameter is
related to the single particle gap via a Ward identity. We explicitly calculate
the chemical potential, the single-particle gap, and the superfluid order
parameter at the unitary point and compare our results with experiments and
previous calculations.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Effective three-particle interactions in low-energy models for multiband systems
We discuss different approximations for effective low-energy interactions in
multi-band models for weakly correlated electrons. In the study of Fermi
surface instabilities of the conduction band(s), the standard approximation
consists only keeping those terms in the bare interactions that couple only to
the conduction band(s), while corrections due to virtual excitations into bands
away from the Fermi surface are typically neglected. Here, using a functional
renormalization group approach, we present an improved truncation for the
treatment of the effective interactions in the conduction band that keeps track
of the generated three-particle interactions (six-point term) and hence allows
one to include important aspects of these virtual interband excitations. Within
a simplified two-patch treatment of the conduction band, we demonstrate that
these corrections can have a rather strong effect in parts of the phase diagram
by changing the critical scales for various orderings and the phase boundaries.Comment: revised version, 16 pages, 13 figure
Calculation of the average Green's function of electrons in a stochastic medium via higher-dimensional bosonization
The disorder averaged single-particle Green's function of electrons subject
to a time-dependent random potential with long-range spatial correlations is
calculated by means of bosonization in arbitrary dimensions. For static
disorder our method is equivalent with conventional perturbation theory based
on the lowest order Born approximation. For dynamic disorder, however, we
obtain a new non-perturbative expression for the average Green's function.
Bosonization also provides a solid microscopic basis for the description of the
quantum dynamics of an interacting many-body system via an effective stochastic
model with Gaussian probability distribution.Comment: RevTex, no figure
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